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Paleomagnetic Constraint of the Brunhes Age Sedimentary Record From Lake Junín, Peru

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
Hatfield, Robert G
Stoner, Joseph S
Solada, Katharine E
Morey, Ann E
Woods, Arielle
Chen, Christine Y
Abbott, Mark B
Rodbell, Donald T
Mcgee, David
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
Hatfield, Robert G
Stoner, Joseph S
Solada, Katharine E
Morey, Ann E
Woods, Arielle
Chen, Christine Y
Abbott, Mark B
Rodbell, Donald T
Mcgee, David
Source :
Frontiers
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

© Copyright © 2020 Hatfield, Stoner, Solada, Morey, Woods, Chen, McGee, Abbott and Rodbell. Normalized remanence, a proxy for relative geomagnetic paleointensity, along with radiocarbon and U-Th age constraints, facilitates the generation of a well-constrained chronology for sediments recovered during International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP) coring of Lake Junín, Peru. The paleomagnetic record of the ∼88 m stratigraphic section from Lake Junín was studied, and rock magnetic variability constrained, through analysis of 109 u-channel samples and 56 discrete samples. Downcore variations in sediment lithology reflect climate and hydrological processes over glacial-interglacial time frames and these changes are strongly reflected in the bulk magnetic properties. Glacial sediments are characterized by higher detrital silt content, higher magnetic susceptibility and magnetic remanence values, and a magnetic coercivity that is characteristic of ferrimagnetic (titano)magnetite and/or maghemite. Interglacial sediments and low lake-level facies are dominated by carbonate lithologies and/or peat horizons that result in lower magnetic concentration values. Sediments with moderately high Natural Remanent Magnetization (NRM) intensity (>1 × 10–3 A/m) have well resolved component directions and inclination values that vary around geocentric axial dipole expectations. This remanence value can be used as a threshold to filter the lowest quality paleomagnetic data from the record. Normalized NRM intensity values are also sensitive to lithologic variability, but following NRM remanence filtering, only the highest quality ferrimagnetic dominated data are retained which then show no coherence with bulk magnetic properties. Constrained by the existing radiocarbon based chronology over the last 50 kyrs and 18 U-Th age constraints that are restricted to five interglacial sediment packages, filtered normalized remanence parameters compare well with global relative paleoin

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Frontiers
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1286402729
Document Type :
Electronic Resource